Im not sure if this is the correct place to post this, but fuck it.
Red pill me on being an underwater basket weaver. Pros and cons. Types of money, the job itself, the pay, life in general as a weaver. Anything helps.
Im currently in undergrad, going to underwater basket weaving school when I graduate. I definitely want a liberal arts degree, but Im on the fence about spending so much time underwater. Also, what else can I do with an underwater basketweaving degree?
Field is already over saturated
>>1667126
If you don't get into a good school, your degree will be worthless.
>>1667126
Your job will be complitely automated in 5-10 years. Sorry bro, you are fucked.
>>1667130
No way dude, you're a fucking basket case
>>1667130
Not yet man.
>>1667126
This is still promisingly building itself up into an enormous industry.
I've been teaching myself about the whole discipline lately.
Fill your tub and watch youtube videos on the matter.
I don't think it's my main passion for now but I can tell you it's all gonna pay off in a near future. My wrinkled skin, the wasted water, weird marks on my feet, my humid notebook; it's all gonna pay off.
Oh also, there's been a resurgence in the study of manually milking fish. I'd suggest looking that up cause the pay is insane.
Godspeed and don't worry about machines stealing your work (they can't resist water)
I have PhD in UBW, pic related. The field is becoming overcrowded, but there's still a place for talented graduates. You really need work experience at one of the big 6 UBW firms.
There can be money in it, but like all highly competitive fields, 90% of the money is made by the top 5% UBWs.
They're fast and accurate and know all of the different weave patterns. It's frightening to watch.
Not to mention that there's a culture of bullying and social dominance, which most people can't handle.
>>1667130
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